Somebody out there can call that phone number and give the names of the people(s) that done this horrible crime. I would hate to know that I knew and did not tell. I want Karma to share blessings on my loved ones. Not suffering. If you love anyone at all in your heart, make the call if you know real facts and names. If you don't love anyone or have never lost a person that you love....you do not understand anyway.

sheila i'm sure you know more than most of us. marvin g (bubba) ran around with (the nephew) and a few others and kerry elmore had a green ltd at the time also. what about all the blood that was found in marvins house from a (secret) room that he did his whatever all the way from that room to the front door at that time ???? maybe you should be making that phone call...

I am sorry, but you are telling me stuff that I have never heard. I heard about a bunch of blood in the driveway when Mrs. Smith was dragged up by someone's dog and eventually died. I heard about a bunch of blood when Pauline Guy ran over Jack in the driveway. I heard about a bunch of blood when Johnny Warren was murdered in Jack's house. There have been enough fusses and fights over there, as some parties have, some of your blood may even be there. You bet I will forward your letter to the GBI, can you give me your name and address so they can come and talk to you? You may have just solved this. They can talk to Marvin over The Church of the Nazarene cemetery. Mike was a seventeen year old kid....it seems like a big act for a high school kid to be involved in...but who knows, but rest assured I will make that call for you as soon as I finish this blog. I will give you a few minutes to blog your name if not, the GBI can find the sender of the blog in about thirty seconds. Congratulations! You may have solved this one. If so, I hope you get a reward.

Wow GBI sure got to me fast, Oh never mind that was the neighbors dog, Maybe you don't know anything about the blood then. Be glad to tell them what I heard. I was told it was reported by another person to the police but maybe it wasn't ??? The person that saw all the blood was told they had drug a deer thru the house (yeah right)

Well, you and the other lady should have insisted that you were heard? What police did she tell? I do not believe she told a police. Unless your neighbor's dog wears a badge, they would be hard to confuse. Tom is a very polite, nice looking, well-mannered and all around nice guy. You two have a pleasant conversation. He may be forced to send a representative because Walter's hard work has triggered many leads.

Rumor has it, "Can you check with "I heard it through the grapevine" and tell me who put the copperhead snake in Marvin's bed to try and kill him." You find that answer for me and I will quit blogging on this sight. It only kept him in intensive care for four days.

I witnessed a goat make several rounds through that house once....but it was because my Mother was trying to cut its' gonads off. I don't think it ever got to the point of putting up deer stands in the house, though.

You are not the same person who wrote yesterday's blog. Don't try to confuse things. This murder of Donna is a very serious issue. Maybe you can lose a loved one in a brutal murder such as this and have no resolve for 26 years.

The lady that was hypotized also described the green station wagon and the man standing next to it. i pray God will lay it on the heart of the monster so heavy, he/she feel like they sleeping on a bed of hot nails, and cant function daily to eat, live, breath, or nothing, i hope they come under so much conviction they have to run to law and admit to it....

There are an estimated 100,000 uncaught killers in the United States. Cops are overworked, departments underfunded, and as many as one in three murders goes unsolved. But the Vidocq Society — named after Eugene Francois Vidocq of Paris, the world's first detective and founder of France's Brigade de la Sûreté police force — hunts down the murderers, frees the innocent, and succors the families victimized by crime.

It is one of the world's most exclusive clubs, open only to the best detectives and forensic scientists on the planet — the greatest gathering of such talent ever assembled in one room. There are never more than 82 members at a time, one for each year of Vidocq's life. They hail from 28 law-enforcement agencies in 12 countries, including the FBI, CIA, Interpol, Scotland Yard, Hong Kong Police, NYPD, Brigade de la Sûreté, DEA, ATF, Secret Service, Treasury Department, U.S. Navy, Egyptian Army, and U.S. Marshals.
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Their meetings exude the elegant, privileged, old-world atmosphere of a Victorian men's club; the New York Times once dubbed them "the heirs of Holmes." They meet monthly in Philadelphia from around the globe to solve "unsolvable" cold murders over a hot gourmet lunch, and work pro bono instead of swatting golf balls around luxury resorts.

For my book, I went to Christmas and New Year's Eve parties with Vidocq Society members, dined with their families, and drank vodka at odd hours. I attended conventions for groups such as the National Organization for Parents of Murdered Children, where I was one of the only people in attendance — out of a thousand — whose children had not been killed. And I can tell you: the men and women who confront violent psychopaths aren't perfect — no humans are — but they're heroes.

The Vidocq Society's three founders are William Fleisher, a former FBI special agent, high-ranking U.S. Customs investigator and world-class interrogator; forensic psychologist Richard Walter, a slender, chain-smoking, blasphemous-tongued loner who has logged thousands of interviews over 20 years with convicted criminals at the largest walled penitentiary in the world, and subsequently helped invent modern criminal profiling; and Frank Bender, a goateed bohemian psychic sculptor — Esquire's Man of the Month in April 2004 — who is the most celebrated forensic artist in the world, who successfully and uncannily predicts how fugitive serial killers will look decades after their last sightings.

"I call Frank with the tough cases," says America's Most Wanted host John Walsh, who considers him brilliant. (Bender is also happily sex-addicted, having slept with some 300 women — his wife had no objections. He is dying of mesothelioma that has eaten two of his ribs, and doctors can't understand why he isn't dead yet.)

Other members include FBI agent Robert Ressler, who has confronted Charles Manson, John Wayne Gacy, and more "serial killers" (a term he coined) than anyone in history and who was the partial inspiration for Jack Crawford in The Silence of the Lambs; men who have stood guard for everyone from the governor of Pennsylvania to the queen of England; noted investigators of the JFK and Martin Luther King assassinations; and Frank Friel, who solved the 1981 assassination of mob underboss Philip "Chicken Man" Testa, immortalized in Bruce Springsteen's song "Atlantic City."

The Vidocq Society has had major successes. They solved the murder of a millionaire's son (brutally murdered by a manipulative girlfriend), a grisly slaughter at a Roy Rogers restaurant after closing time, and Bender and Walter nabbed mass murderer John List in 11 days – after the feds couldn't catch him for 17 years.

They are besieged with requests from cops and victims around the world, including a congressman who wanted to solve a murder in his family, and a young, small-town Tennessee cop overmatched by an elderly millionaire serial killer who moved from state to state killing his wives. However, a case must be cold for two years before they will touch it. (Walter claims to know who killed JonBenét Ramsey, and the identity of Jack the Ripper, but won't tell anybody.)

No one can apply for membership in the society; one has to be invited by sponsorship of an existing member. A single blackball will sink a candidate. But it's not as sexy as you might expect from the movies.

"We live out of suitcases, sleep in cars eating burritos on surveillance, urinate in gas station men's rooms," says member Joe O'Kane. "Double-o-seven it ain't."

These are the best of the best. I have read and studied Ressler for years.

How odd to me that the locals call what they do "Hocus Pocus" science. They are the best at what they do. There is no excuse for this. I am sure the society will put in a good word to the local FBI about this case.

If Boyt says he was in now deceased Mr. Hollis' car during the storm and didn't go back on scene after the rain storm, and he got the call at The Rock that the body was found, how can he state with near certainty that then Sheriff Monoghan viewed the body where it was found and firefighters kept the scene clear so evidence wouldn't be destroyed. If he wasn't at the scene how does he know what occurred on the scene.

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